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Trump worries about unemployment numbers: 'I wish the Fake News would report it correctly'

President Donald Trump has claimed the United States is the "hottest" country and touted the economy as the greatest it's ever been — but he had a different message on Friday and tried to claim the recent jobs report numbers were inaccurate.

Trump appeared to face the rising unemployment rate and shared a few excuses to justify why he thinks the job market has struggled following the November jobs report that hinted at a weakening labor market.

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'Time's up!' Rebel GOP lawmaker demands Epstein files release after DOJ downplay

Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY) issued the Trump administration a blunt warning Friday just hours ahead of the Justice Department’s deadline to release its files on Jeffrey Epstein.

“Times up,” Massie wrote Friday in a social media post on X. “Release the files.”

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'The brink of illegitimacy': Professors warn no turning back for 'noxious' Supreme Court

Two American university professors Friday warned the "noxious" Supreme Court can no longer be saved.

Harvard law professor Ryan Doerfler and Yale law professor Samuel Moyn wrote an opinion piece published by The Guardian about how the high court's legitimacy has been increasingly damaged under President Donald Trump's second term. Conservative justices have handed Trump and the MAGA movement a number of wins, including overturning of Roe v. Wade, "what remains of the Voting Rights Act," and losing its "nonpartisan image."

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'His reign will end': Ex-GOP insider flags evidence Trump's power is already 'waning'

Conservative political strategist Rick Wilson, one of President Donald Trump’s most vocal critics, urged his readers on Friday to “be of good cheer,” saying he believes the Trump administration is nearing collapse after what he described as a particularly difficult week for the White House.

“His reign will end. His power will wane. You could feel it this week. You watched that frantic disaster of a speech, the one where he fired off one deranged idea after another like a malfunctioning nail gun, and the teleprompter looked like it had been set to ‘cocaine binge,’" Wilson wrote in an analysis published Friday on his Substack “Against All Enemies.”

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'I was literally stunned': Ex-White House reporter sounds alarm over 'manic' Trump event

A former White House correspondent wrote he was “was, quite literally, stunned,” by Donald Trump's Wednesday evening national address, suggesting it may represent a turning point in recognizing the president's serious cognitive and physical decline.

In a Salon column, Brian Karem noted that Trump's 17-minute address marked a departure from his typical rally format. Rather than speaking before enthusiastic supporters, the president delivered his remarks at the White House's Diplomatic Reception Room with cameras positioned at closer range—an arrangement that proved unflattering.

Karem observed that the intimate setting lacked the energy Trump typically generates. "This time, no one wanted to see what he produced. Gone are the rallies. Gone is the fear and the cheer. Now, the cameras are too close. There's no crowd of adoring fans. On Wednesday, the president obviously wanted to be anywhere other than the White House's Diplomatic Reception Room."

The correspondent noted that Trump spent considerable time blaming former President Joe Biden for his administration's inability to fulfill campaign promises. Karem detected parallels to the exhaustion Biden displayed before withdrawing from his 2024 reelection bid.

"His yammering all seemed extremely forced — a constipated act of a politically desperate has-been. He tried to convince the American people of his strength and relevance through the sheer force of his voice and his staccato delivery. But Donald Trump isn't the man he was even a year ago."

Karem characterized the 79-year-old president as "mentally unstable and physically feeble, clinging to his lectern as if it were a walker," and suggested he remains in office primarily to pursue revenge against various adversaries.

"He wants revenge on Biden because Biden beat him. He wants revenge on the Democrats because they rejected him. He wants revenge on reporters who ask him questions he doesn't want to answer and those who write things he doesn't like. He wants revenge on those who've challenged him, prosecuted him, questioned him or simply didn't agree with him. Nelson Mandela declared that the mentality of revenge destroys nations, while the mentality of forgiveness builds them," he wrote before warning, "Donald Trump is dedicated to not only destroying the nation, but also to reducing it to rubble."

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'Here's the kicker': Stephen Colbert highlights hurdle to Trump surviving Epstein dump

Stephen Colbert highlighted how President Donald Trump's next hurdle will be surviving the upcoming Jeffrey Epstein file dump Friday — and he thinks Trump could be out of luck this time.

The Late Show host dropped a monologue about the upcoming deadline on Thursday night, just hours before the Department of Justice is set to release the long awaited files.

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'That's a self-own': Trump skewered for 'embarrassing' set of losses he brought on himself

Donald Trump is mired in a bad streak that began with a poorly received rally in a Pennsylvania casino, then came his universally condemned attack on murdered Hollywood producer Rob Reiner, his chief of staff creating a firestorm, a ranting national address and then the outrage over adding his name to the Kennedy Center.

According to MS NOW’s Joe Scarborough, this past week has been a long slog of embarrassments for the president who can’t seem to seem to help himself.

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Jimmy Kimmel finally cracks over 'psychotic episode' that saw him canceled

Jimmy Kimmel finally cracked as he finished his final broadcast of 2025 — and looked back on the trauma of President Donald Trump's pressure campaign to get him canceled.

"This has been a strange year. It's been a hard year," Kimmel said. "We've had some lows, we've had some highs. For me, maybe more than any year of my life."

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Trump 'tantrums' and 'impulsiveness' has delayed White House ballroom by 'years': analysis

Constant delays to the White House ballroom are being caused by Donald Trump's "tantrums" and "impulsiveness", a political commentator has claimed.

The president made his plans for the $200million turned $400million ballroom project known in July this year, but the renovation has hit more than a few snags. Trump has been hit by more than one lawsuit regarding his changes to the White House and surrounding buildings, and the head architect of his proposed East Wing renovation quit earlier this year.

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Trump's 'greatest hit of crazy' needs to be sanity alarm call for staffers: economist

President Trump praised the state of the U.S. economy in a primetime address Wednesday evening, even though new government statistics show the nation’s unemployment rate is at a new four-year high of 4.6%. Dean Baker, senior economist at the Center for Economic and Policy Research, says Trump’s aides should be “wondering about the man’s sanity” after Wednesday’s speech. “This is utterly divorced from reality,” he said.

Though Trump blames former President Biden for the poor economy, Baker notes that Trump had inherited an “incredibly strong economy by almost every measure imaginable.”

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'Never been this blatant': Trump's picks mocked behind the scenes as 'MAGA disciples'

President Donald Trump’s hand-picked U.S. ambassadors to European countries are being openly mocked by some European leaders, The Guardian reported Friday, with one leader labeling them as nothing more than the president’s gang of “MAGA disciples.”

“[They are] basically all relatives, close friends or big [donors],” said a European Union diplomat, speaking with The Guardian under the condition of anonymity. “That’s always been the US tradition, but it’s never been quite this blatant. These are like MAGA disciples.”

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'Can't turn the Titanic that quickly': Trump allies say 'work to be done' after big speech

Donald Trump's inner circle are flapping after the president's bizarre national address earlier this week.

In a 20-minute speech to the nation, Trump made a series of claims later debunked by political analysts. Even The Republican Party is concerned with the president's speech, as some insiders believe there is a lot of work to do between now and the midterm elections next November.

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'Laughter?' CNN host surprised by Epstein survivors' reaction to question about DOJ

CNN's Audie Cornish remarked on the reaction of Jeffrey Epstein's abuse survivors to a question about the Department of Justice's pending release of investigative files about the late sex offender.

Congress passed a law last month mandating DOJ to publicize redacted files by Friday, and CNN's MJ Lee asked a group of Epstein survivors whether they had faith the department would release everything in its possession – and they all shook their heads no and even burst into laughter.

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